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The following is a Paiute legend as told to Alva Matheson by the Piede tribe near Cedar City, Utah, on February 24, 1968. HOW THE INDIANS FOUND CLOTHING " In many of the petroglyphs around this ( Cedar City, Utah) area, one of the main characters pictured is the goat and until quite recent times there seemed to be no mention of domestic animals in connection with the Indians. On casual observance there is little difference in the individual pictures, but on examination, one will see that the body is full of small spots or peck marks. On inquiring about this, I was told the following story: In the beginning, Tobats made all the things on the earth. Each animal was given some kind of protection against the elements. To most he gave a coat of fur for cold weather which would shed or come off in the spring when it was no longer needed. But for man he had forgotten to provide him with anything to keep him warm, and when Tam, the winter, blew his cold north breath on them they suffered greatly with the cold, so they called to Shinob saying, ' Why did you not give us fur to keep us warm the way you did the other animals? Why must we suffer when it is cold? What can you do for us? ' Shinob seeing that they were suffering from the cold told them to build traps to catch the wild ' nagah' ( sheep and goats) and he showed them how to make the traps. Then he told them to drive the '. jan into the trap in the spring of the year and to pull the wool from their